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Vicky Wilson

    Vicky Wilson is a celebrated poet dedicated to fostering writing within schools and the wider community. Her work, featured in collections and publications, showcases a distinctive voice and has been performed across various venues. With three decades of experience in publishing, Wilson possesses extensive expertise in organizing and producing literary events and publications. Her endeavors frequently aim to support educational initiatives and charitable causes.

    Did I tell you? : 131 poems for children in need
    Walking Oxford
    London's Houses
    Walking Bristol
    London's Oddities
    • 2024

      Walking Bristol

      • 368 pages
      • 13 hours of reading

      The book features eight unique walking tours that uncover Bristol's hidden treasures, showcasing its rich contrasts. Readers will explore the city's stunning Georgian architecture, medieval streets, innovative street art, and lush parks. The walks also highlight the engineering marvels and serene waterways that define Bristol's character, offering a comprehensive look at both its historical and contemporary charm.

      Walking Bristol
    • 2021

      Walking Oxford tells the story of the city, its people and places in eight surprising walks. Readers will explore many of the colleges and majestic University buildings, but also look beyond the famous dreaming spires to uncover a diverse story of millstreams and medieval lanes, breweries and jam factories, social housing and grand suburbs.

      Walking Oxford
    • 2018

      Walking through most parts of London produces puzzles entire buildings or bits of street furniture, monuments or memorials that seem out of place, out of time or simply inexplicable. Sometimes they become so familiar we cease to notice their strangeness, sometimes we are intrigued enough to explore their stories. The findings are collected here as oddities though the word has many different nuances. Some things would be odd under any circumstances, some are the work of very odd people, some are odd by being relocated in new contexts, such as a Wren spire grounded in a 1960s housing estate or a South Seas whalebone in a suburban street. Some seem odd now because of the way the world has changed around them. So, take a seat next to Spike Milligan, discover the dead letter box used by spies in Brompton Cemetery, and dance on the grave of one of the world s greatest clowns.

      London's Oddities
    • 2014

      An invitation and guide to the best homes in London, from Ben Franklin's to Sherlock Holmes'  London has an amazing range of houses regularly open to the public, and this book covers them all. Architects from Robert Adam to Ernö Goldfinger are represented. In social terms, the spectrum runs from the destitute who filled the workhouse now known as Vestry House in Walthamstow, to aristocrats and royalty busily building and coupling in Kensington and Twickenham. With architectural details, social history, biographies, and practical information, this book provides everything visitors need to plan a trip back through the centuries.

      London's Houses
    • 2010

      Did I Tell You? 131 poems for Children in Need was published on 16 November 2010 to raise money for the children's charity. The collection, based on the theme of childhood, has been put together by Kent poets Nicky Gould and Vicky Wilson after an invitation for submissions was posted in the local press and online.

      Did I tell you? : 131 poems for children in need